Today I finish packing, then launch out to drive to St. Louis for the first Realm Makers.

There I’ll help announce the winner of the Clive Staples Award at the conference’s costume dinner tomorrow night, Friday, Aug. 2. Internet readers will then learn of that winner this coming Saturday — and each contest finalist will also receive a handsome certificate.

But in the meantime, even while Spec-Faith was having its machinery broken by gremlins, I was able to keep up my own attempts to explore epic stories for God’s glory. That’s because last month I also joinedChrist and Pop Culture, at the Patheos “religion blogs” network.

You’ve likely seen some CAPC links here at Spec-Faith. On occasion they’ve returned the favor. And because discerning and enjoying all culture is a favorite topic, I had to join.

Today before I leave, I’m finishing a feature for CAPC that will compare a certain bestselling secular fantasy series with a certain bestselling evangelical fantasy series, all to ask the big question: which series, for all its redeeming qualities, is more often abused by readers to justify real-life mysticism and superstition? But my existing columns are here, including:

(Quote from a review of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey) “Soon after Gandalf comes to Bilbo, 13 dwarves show up, a biblical number.” Yay! It’s a Christian story.

An episode of the sadly short-lived Green Lantern: The Animated Series quoted from 1 Cor. 13 and showed “greater love.” My own reaction: Yay! It’s a Christian story.

In Oz The Great and Powerful, the wizard crashes and prays, “Get me out of here and I’ll do great things.” Later: “Thank You. You won’t regret this.” Yay! It’s a Christian story.

People suspect that is exactly how a story becomes Christian: pray to God, quote a Biblical phrase, or even have a “Biblical number” of something. For those who believe this is my Father’s world, with our Father’s work in nature, Scripture, and math, this is a partial truth. Yet it can be hijacked into forced attempts to find subtle Biblical references in stories. … (Read the rest)

[Santorum said] faith-based films tend to be lousy, and Christians should quit trying to lock modern popular culture out of their lives. . . . “For a long time, Christians have decided that the best way to fight the popular culture is to keep it at bay, to lock it out of their home. … That’s a losing battle,” Santorum said in an interview . . .

Reading this brings me the same response as hearing, say, that “The Church is in Trouble,” or that “More Christian Men Must Man Up”: You don’t say?

Surely most Christians agree we must reject those “lock out pop culture” notions. But we seem confused about what’s next and especially why. … (Read the rest)

Superhero films result in many small blessings, perhaps including the amusing fact that some critics seem determined to coax themselves into disillusionment with the genre.

After the last Comic-Con, I’ve heard more such views from secular and Christian critics.

Secular critics seem to say: The superhero genre is tired; Hollywood is stretching to make a super-mint. Recently DrudgeReport.com gave its own headline to the Man of Steel sequel story: “Studio tries SUPERMANBATMAN.” You’d think all such projects risk the same box-office doom as, say, The Lone Ranger or R.I.P.D. But fans reacted excitedly (such as here).